And we asked The Gurus for films that voters should watch during the holiday that they might not be likely to throw in the DVD player or go to see at a screening. This is the rather eclectic results. (And a some more details about the choices by some of the Gurus below the chart.

Rank

Last Chart

You MUST Watch...

Breznican

Ellwood

Hammond

Harris

Howell

Karger

Olsen

Poland

Pond

Stone

Tapley

Thompson

VanAirsdale

Wloszczyna

Votes

Total

Take Shelter
Acting (Mike Shannon)

*

*

*

*

4

4

Margaret

*

*

*

3

3

Warrior

*

*

2

2

We Need To Talk About Kevin

*

*

2

2

Beginners
Acting (Christopher Plummer)

*

*

2

2

Drive

*

*

2

2

Pina
Documentary

*

*

2

2

Like Crazy
Acting (Felicity Jones)

*

*

2

2

Win Win
Screenplay

*

*

2

2

One Vote Wonders

Le Havre

*

1

1

Shame
Acting

*

1

1

Certified Copy

*

1

1

Shame

*

1

1

A Separation
Screenplay

*

1

1

Margin Call
Screenplay

*

1

1

Another Happy Day

*

1

1

Super 8

*

1

1

The Trip
Acting (Steve Coogan)

*

1

1

Rampart
Acting (Woody Harrelson)

*

1

1

A Better Life
Acting (Damien Bichir)

*

1

1

Bill Cunningham, New York
Documentary

*

1

1

Super
Acting (Ellen Page)/Screenplay

*

1

1

Anonymous
Acting

*

1

1

The Ledge
Cinematography

*

1

1

Jane Eyre

*

1

1

Hanna
Music

*

1

1

Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes
Acting (Andy Serkis)

*

1

1

Moneyball

*

1

1

The Interrupters
Documentary

*

1

1

The Debt

*

1

1

ANTHONY BREZNICAN
1. Like Crazy, for Felicity Jones subtle, alluring performance as someone yearning for a long-distance love. Will make you remember what
it was like to fall for someone like this — unless you’re a loveless bastard.
2. We Need to Talk About Kevin — it’s a horror story set firmly in reality. There may be no such thing as ghosts and monsters, but both
exist in this unrelenting saga about the mother of a son who commits a mass killing.
3.The Debt — it’s a solid espionage/thriller elevated by a vulnerable performance by Jessica Chastain as a novice Mossad agent who faces true
evil and must live with her own failures to combat it. She’s getting plenty of love for The Tree of Life and The Help, but this one is on par
with her work in each.

PETER HOWELL
1. Drive — Because there’s still a chance of deserved Oscar noms. Controlled fury.
2. Certified Copy — One of the year’s best films, period. Juliette Binoche and William Shimell are great as are-they-or-aren’t-they? lovers. As puzzling as the Mona Lisa.
3. Shame — At least see the subway seduction scene early on between Michael Fassbender and Lucy Walters, better use of silence than all of The Artist. Remember, Walters is eligible for Best Supporting Actress!

SASHA STONE
1. Beginners only for the Christopher Plummer parts
2. Rise of the Planet of the Apes only for the apes parts.
3. Moneyball

KRISTOPHER TAPLEY
1. Margaret (Because it’s the year’s best movie and we almost lost it.)
2. Take Shelter (Michael Shannon’s performance is the best of the year.)
3. Attack the Block/Hanna (This year’s torch-bearers of alternative film music.)

Susan Wloszczyna
1. The Trip, to appreciate Steve Coogan’s considerable talents, which are rarely fully showcased in regular films, and for its take on a uniquely male relationship. Plus nice scenery.
2. Bill Cunningham doc. An oddball who eschews earthly possessions and a private life just so he can capture the fleeting pageant of New York savoir faire each week in the pages of the New York Times. And on his own terms, too! One of the rare times that the word inspirational truly applies.
3. Win Win. No one is better than Tom McCarthy at celebrating human imperfections except maybe Alexander Payne — but even then.